On November 14, 2012, the DOJ and the SEC provided unprecedented guidance on the FCPA, releasing a Resource Guide to the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (Guide or Guidance). See “DOJ and SEC Jointly Issue Long-Awaited Guidance on the FCPA” (Nov. 14, 2012) and the articles analyzing the Guide in this issue of the Anti-Corruption Report. Two days later, at the American Conference Institute’s 28th Annual Conference on the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, top officials from the DOJ and the SEC addressed the FCPA community. In what moderator Homer Moyer, member at Miller & Chevalier Chartered, described as an “impressive exercise in transparency,” Charles Duross, the Deputy Chief of the Fraud Section of the Criminal Division of the DOJ, Kara Brockmeyer, Chief of the FCPA Unit of the Division of Enforcement of the SEC and Jeffrey Knox, Principal Deputy Chief of the Fraud Section of the Criminal Division of the DOJ, answered the legal and business community’s most pressing questions about the Guidance. Topics addressed included: reasons for providing the Guidance; whether companies should rely on the Guidance; a company’s potential liability for the acts of a foreign subsidiary; successor liability under the FCPA; gifts and entertainment; definition of the term “foreign official”; corporate compliance programs; and corporate criminal liability. This article relays the officials’ most noteworthy points on each of the foregoing topics.